The truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth.We just need to buck up and get to work.
The truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth.We just need to buck up and get to work.
CAP, I think you're looking at two sides of the same coin. Whatever's going on in our lives due to the operation of the Holy Spirit can be described as a calling or a gift or something else depending on the context or frame you're operating in. The gifts that God gives us are to be put to use, and that use would presumably be your calling. Whatever God calls us to do, he empowers us to do, and that power would presumably be your gift.
"andrew said: We just need to buck up and get to work."
"Kevin said: The truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
KISSDoes one need a special gifting or calling to marry one wife? Is a second wife different than a first and requires a special calling? Scripture doesn’t seem to ever differentiate between a man with one and a man more than one, it just calls him a husband.
Scripture doesn't differentiate, but our culture sure does. It's not just a quantitative chance going from one to two wives—it's a helluva a qualitative change.Does one need a special gifting or calling to marry one wife? Is a second wife different than a first and requires a special calling? Scripture doesn’t seem to ever differentiate between a man with one and a man more than one, it just calls him a husband.
Yes, in this country it absolutely is.Is a second wife different than a first...?
The only service I can think of that would require a man to have more than one woman to fulfill that service is that of man who is being called to be an example of a husband in a biblical plural marriage. That entails a lot more than just finding an additional wife/wives.. If God calls you into an area of service that would require you to be married to more than one, then a calling is needed.
Scripture doesn't differentiate, but our culture sure does. It's not just a quantitative chance going from one to two wives—it's a helluva a qualitative change.
I'm not arguing that it requires a special gifting or calling; I'd argue instead that modern cultural Christianity in the West is vapid and boring, and that going strongly counter-cultural is where we should have been in the first place.
Yes, in this country it absolutely is.
The gifts of leader or administrator would certainly help, but those are listed for the specific benefit of the church.
Just wanted to reiterate that. Maybe I'm reading it wrong, but it appears that @Mojo and @Asforme&myhouse are responding to my post as if I said something different.I'm not arguing that it requires a special gifting or calling
Well said.The only service I can think of that would require a man to have more than one woman to fulfill that service is that of man who is being called to be an example of a husband in a biblical plural marriage.
I just wanted to be sure nobody came away from that sentence with the idea that because additional wives don't require a special calling, therefore they are no different from the first, or not different in any material way. It's completely different, it just doesn't require a dream or an angel or a burning bush to get there.Is a second wife different than a first and requires a special calling?
I agree 100%, but I'd like to sharpen the point on this a bit, because I'm right in the middle of something now that is echoing situations I've seen before. For the cases I have seen where men failed spectacularly, the most obvious thing they have in common is the "I got this" part.I think in our culture most men would fail in attempting plural because they don’t have the wisdom or the stones to make it work.
It's completely different
The stones we need are the ones that help us man up and admit when we're in over our heads, not the ones that drive us to stubbornly run something into the ground and damage a bunch of peoples' lives while self-righteously maintaining that we're on top of everything and the trouble is all someone else's fault.
@Asforme&myhouse, you and I are agreed on the main points here. My interest was in clarifying this one sentence:
I just wanted to be sure nobody came away from that sentence with the idea that because additional wives don't require a special calling, therefore they are no different from the first, or not different in any material way. It's completely different, it just doesn't require a dream or an angel or a burning bush to get there.
I agree 100%, but I'd like to sharpen the point on this a bit, because I'm right in the middle of something now that is echoing situations I've seen before. For the cases I have seen where men failed spectacularly, the most obvious thing they have in common is the "I got this" part.
It takes a certain kind of confidence to take on this project, and the difference between 'brave' and 'foolish' is usually debriefed after the fact with 20/20 hindsight. The wisdom we need was described by the prophet Kenny: "you gotta know when to hold 'em and when to fold 'em, know when to walk away and when to run". The stones we need are the ones that help us man up and admit when we're in over our heads, not the ones that drive us to stubbornly run something into the ground and damage a bunch of peoples' lives while self-righteously maintaining that we're on top of everything and the trouble is all someone else's fault.
"Fail early and fail often" is a catch-phrase for entrepreneurs and startups. Try things, try a lot of things, but be ready to admit when something's not working and move on. The strength and the wisdom—the manliness—will be expressed primarily through being quick to forgive, quick to learn, and quick to seek help or advice when necessary. That takes real courage.
Oh, like the way that vacationing in Canada is different from vacationing in Syria or maybe Iran. Or the way playing first person shooter games compares to being a combat soldier in a fire fight. Or the way having a second child in the U.S. would have been different from having a second child in China not too long ago (or a third child in China today).In what ways is it completely different?
I agree with what you wrote as establishing a sort of spectrum of experience, but not to the extent it presents as an either/or dichotomy (that may just be me...). I agree with your edit: It's very personal and individual. In my experience there are so many variables it's hard to generalize, at least until we have more data.That's my untested theory anyway. Would love to hear otherwise from those who've seen more of these marriages play out.
Nope. Not implying you said that. That's the problem I have with the initial premise, not you.Just wanted to reiterate that. Maybe I'm reading it wrong, but it appears that @Mojo and @Asforme&myhouse are responding to my post as if I said something different.